Chelsea Handler announces she's 'finally in love, with the best kind of guy there is' dailymail.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailymail.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
View Comments Summertime, and the living is easy, opens George Gershwin s opera Porgy & Bess, but with so many things to do in the summer, it s not always easy to separate the meh from the yeah! when bombarded with all the shiny choices. Fret not, friends, because we ve done the hard work of figuring out the best places to go and things to do so that you can have the most memorable summer ever. We ve rounded up some recent stories that will surely make you the know-it-all when your friends ask you what there is to do in Cincinnati this summer. Now, let s celebrate doing stuff and things again!
Take a first look at the Icon Music Center: - Louisville Business First bizjournals.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bizjournals.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Dermot Kennedy Adds Additional Dates To His Better Days Tour Dermot has seen undeniable global success with the 2019 release of his debut album Without Fear.by TV News Desk Today, Irish singer-songwriter and touring giant Dermot Kennedy has announced additional tour dates for his Better Days Tour. Tickets for the new dates go on sale beginning this Friday, June 4th at 12pm local time at Ticketmaster.com. The Live Nation produced tour, which had its first successful run January to March of 2020, resumes in Nashville on July 29, 2021. The chart-topping artist, who has surpassed 2 billion global streams across digital platforms, will also make tour stops in Chicago, Minneapolis, and Boston, among other cities. Dermot will be joined by artist Bishop Briggs on select dates. All current U.S. tour dates are listed below.
Tower Of Power & Lettuce Announce September 2021 Concerts In Ohio May 26, 2021 Photos via Ticketmaster Two generations of powerhouse funk acts will join forces when Tower of Power and Lettuce team up for a pair of concerts in September. Both shows will take place in Ohio. Rose Music Center in Huber Heights will host the bands on September 21. Then, Tower Of Power and Lettuce play the Taft Theatre in Cincinnati on September 22. Advertisement Tickets for both concerts go on sale this Friday, May 28 at 10 a.m. ET via Ticketmaster (Huber Heights, Cincinnati). Members of Lettuce have long discussed the influence of Tower Of Power on their sound. In fact, Lettuce drummer Adam Deitch took a lesson from ToP’s
Cincinnati Magazine March 12, 2021 Bob Castellini called it a “mud pit” and “dust bin.” Mark Mallory called it a “bunch of nothingness” and “pile of dirt.” The Cincinnati Reds owner and the former mayor were describing what downtown Cincinnati’s riverfront was like about 15 years ago. Two expensive new stadiums had been erected, with the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center situated between, but surrounding them was a lot of dirt and acres of parking lots. In the 1990s, what we know as The Banks was mostly home to parking lots and warehouses. Photograph courtesy of Kenton County Public Library Today, of course, nothing less than an utter transformation of the riverfront has taken place, as the mud pit became The Banks a $2 billion-plus 200-acre playground of pro sports, restaurants, bars, green space, walking paths, a carousel, and (sometimes) a giant Ferris wheel. It’s the most ambitious civic project ever undertaken here, requiring unprecedented teamwork from city and county leaders, their counterparts in state and federal governments, and private real estate interests. The “nothingness” has become something, to be sure, but after all this time it still isn’t finished.
Cincinnati Magazine December 16, 2020 I was on my way to the bathroom when I accidentally woke up John Cleese. I had no idea he was napping on a couch in the lounge below the Taft Theatre stage, and my clops down the stairs made him sit up. I was horrified. Upstairs, the screening of Monty Python and the Holy Grail had about 15 minutes to go, after which John (I can call him that now) would come on and answer written questions from the audience. The emcee (me) had sorted the cards and decided to squeeze in a quick bathroom run before meeting the guest of honor backstage. Our bleary-versus-bladder introduction wasn’t the one I’d hoped for.